Journal
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT PERSPECTIVES
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 235-254Publisher
ACAD MANAGEMENT
DOI: 10.5465/amp.2013.0126
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Responsible leadership has emerged as a major theme in academic and practical management discourse. In this paper we provide an overview and synthesis of existing and emerging research on responsible leadership and propose a unifying framework for explaining leaders' propensity to engage in two types of socially responsible behavior: do good and avoid harm. The framework models the linkages among individual, situational, organizational, institutional, and supranational influences on responsible leader behavior and describes the mechanisms by which these factors may affect a leader's decisions and actions. Our analysis suggests that do good and avoid harm behaviors are conceptually distinct categories, with different psychological bases and different antecedents that predict them. Further, we find that individual-level and contextual factors combine and interact to influence responsible leader behavior, and a key aspect of the environment in which leaders act and make decisions situational strength moderates the relationship between individual-level factors and a leader's propensity to engage in do good and avoid harm behavior. In addition to providing directions for future research on responsible leader behavior, this article has several implications for practice, specifically how to select, train, and develop socially responsible leaders.
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